So the Doves
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- $19.99
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
"More than a mystery, this fascinating novel is an investigation into loss, loyalty, and the lies people tell each other and themselves." — Publishers Weekly (starred review) Marcus Murray was only 17 when his best friend Melanie vanished from his hometown in oceanside Kent. Afterward, she seemed like a figment of his imagination — she became a story, a myth, a series of actions and consequences incorporated into his own history. Working as a journalist years later, Marcus is flush with success at having uncovered a corrupt alliance between a U.K. bank, the arms trade, and the government. So he's a bit disconcerted when sent from London back to Kent to report on the finding of a corpse during a railway excavation. Worse yet, his moral and professional triumph is called into question by charges of fabrication. While Marcus chafes at his exile and fears for his reputation, the hometown atmosphere evokes thoughts of the long-lost Melanie and her mysterious disappearance. Recounted in chapters that alternate between events from 1989 to the present, So the Doves poses thought-provoking questions about identity, offering a poignant meditation on memory and loss. "So the Doves is an unforgettable crime novel. James writes lyrical prose, combining a compelling plot with a portrait of a man forced to question the entire basis of his life." —The Sunday Times (U.K.) Crime Book of the Month "A twisty, paranoid cat-and-mouse thriller with moving undertones about friendship, youth, memory, desire and the unfinished business of the past, So the Doves kept me up at night frantically turning pages until the very end. It'll do the same for you." — Tim Murphy, author of Christodora and Correspondents
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
London journalist Marcus Murray, the narrator of this elegantly written crime novel from British author James (Wounding), has just broken a story linking a major bank to terrorist organizations. Riding high on this success, he's surprised when his editor sends him to his rarely revisited home town of Medway, Kent, to cover the discovery of a body found while workers were clearing farmland for a European railway link. Returning home stirs up memories of his school friend Melanie Shoreham, who disappeared when he was 17 back in 1989. Third-person flashbacks inform and influence Marcus's view of the present. He now regards Melanie "as if she was a figment of my imagination... What I mean is, she became a story, a myth, a series of actions and consequences folded into my own history." His life begins to crumble when the truthfulness of his latest scoop is called into question and he becomes a suspect in the Medway murder. Is he being set up? Did he have a hand in Melanie's disappearance? More than a mystery, this fascinating novel is an investigation into loss, loyalty, and the lies people tell each other and themselves.